Authors
Joshua M Tybur, Çağla Çınar, Annika K Karinen, Paola Perone
Publication date
2018/7/19
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
373
Issue
1751
Pages
20170204
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
People vary in the degree to which they experience disgust toward—and, consequently, avoid—cues to pathogens. Prodigious work has measured this variation and observed that it relates to, among other things, personality, psychopathological tendencies, and moral and political sentiments. Less work has sought to generate hypotheses aimed at explaining why this variation exists in the first place, and even less work has evaluated how well data support these hypotheses. In this paper, we present and review the evidence supporting three such proposals. First, researchers have suggested that variability reflects a general tendency to experience anxiety or emotional distress. Second, researchers have suggested that variability arises from parental modelling, with offspring calibrating their pathogen avoidance based on their parents' reactions to pathogen cues. Third, researchers have suggested that individuals …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
JM Tybur, Ç Çınar, AK Karinen, P Perone - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2018